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Page 438, results 10926 - 10950

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Spatial variability in biodegradation rates as evidenced by methane production from an aquifer
Neal R. Adrian, Joseph A. Robinson, Joseph M. Suflita
1994, Applied and Environmental Microbiology (60) 3632-3639
Accurate predictions of carbon and energy cycling rates in the environment depend on sampling frequencies and on the spatial variability associated with biological activities. We examined the variability associated with anaerobic biodegradation rates at two sites in an alluvial sand aquifer polluted by municipal landfill leachate. In situ rates of...
Anaerobic biodegradation of halogenated and nonhalogenated N-, s-, and o-heterocyclic compounds in aquifer slurries
Neal R. Adrian, Joseph M. Suflita
1994, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (13) 1551-1557
The fate of several halogenated and nonhalogenated heterocyclic compounds in anoxic aquifer slurries was investigated Substrate depletion and methane formation were monitored in serum bottle incubations by HPLC and GC, respectively Pyridine, pyrimidine, thiophene, and furan were not mineralized following an 11-month incubation, but the corresponding carboxylated or oxygenated compounds...
Reply to “Comment on ‘An efficient numerical solution of the transient storage equations for solute transport in small streams" by R. L. Runkel and S. C. Chapra
Robert L. Runkel, Steven C. Charpa
1994, Water Resources Research (30) 2863-2865
We thank Dawes and Short [this issue] for presenting an alternate technique for the efficient solution of the transient storage solute transport equations. After reading their comment, it is clear that several points in our original manuscript are in need of clarification. In this reply we provide additional information on...
Assessment of spatial variability of major-ion concentrations and del oxygen-18 values in surface snow, Upper Fremont Glacier, Wyoming, USA
D. L. Naftz, P. F. Schuster, M.M. Reddy
1994, Hydrology Research (25) 371-388
One hundred samples were collected from the surface of the Upper Fremont Glacier at equally spaced intervals defined by an 8,100 m2 snow grid to assess the significance of lateral variability in major-ion concentrations and del oxygen-18 values. For the major ions, the largest concentration range within the snow grid was...
Variations in water balance and recharge potential at three western desert sites
G.W. Gee, P.J. Wierenga, Brian J. Andraski, M.H. Young, M.J. Fayer, M.L. Rockhold
1994, Soil Science Society of America Journal (58) 63-72
Radioactive and hazardous waste landfills exist at numerous desert locations in the USA. At these locations, annual precipitation is low and soils are generally dry, yet little is known about recharge of water and transport of contaminants to the water table. Recent water balance measurements made at three desert locations,...
Anaerobic biodegradation of methyl esters by Acetobacterium woodii and Eubacterium limosum
Shi Liu, Joseph M. Suflita
1994, Journal of Industrial Microbiology (13) 321-327
The ability ofAcetobacterium woodii andEubacterium limosum to degrade methyl esters of acetate, propionate, butyrate, and isobutyrate was examined under growing and resting-cell conditions. Both bacteria hydrolyzed the esters to the corresponding carboxylates and methanol under either condition. Methanol was further oxidized to formate under growing but...
Notes on a Mesodinium rubrum red tide in San Francisco Bay (California, USA)
James E. Cloern, Brian E. Cole, Stephen W. Hager
1994, Journal of Plankton Research (16) 1269-1276
Discrete red patches of water were observed in South San Francisco Bay (USA) on 30 April 1993, and examination of live samples showed that this red tide was caused by surface accumulations of the pigmented ciliate Mesodinium rubrum . Vertical profiles showed strong salinity and temperature stratification in the upper...
Hydrologic control of litter decomposition in seasonally flooded prairie marshes
Hilary A. Neckles, Christopher Neill
1994, Hydrobiologia (286) 155-165
The effect of seasonal inundation on the decomposition of emergent macrophyte litter (Scolochloa festucacea) was examined under experimental flooding regimes in a northern prairie marsh. Stem and leaf litter was subjected to six aboveground inundation treatments (ranging from never flooded to flooded April through October) and two belowground...
Establishment, sex structure and breeding system of an exotic riparian willow, Salix X rubens
Patrick B. Shafroth, Michael L. Scott, Jonathan M. Friedman, Richard D. Laven
1994, American Midland Naturalist (132) 159-172
Several Eurasian tree willows (Salix spp.) have become naturalized in riparian areas outside of their native range. Salix x rubens is a Eurasian willow that is conspicuous along streams in the high plains of Colorado. We examined establishment of seedlings and cuttings, the sex structure and the breeding system of...
Methanolobus taylorii sp nov, a new methylotropic, estuarine methanogen
Ronald S. Oremland, David R. Boone
1994, International Journal of Systematic Bacteriology (44) 573-575
Previously published phylogenetic studies of 16S rRNA showed that methylotrophic, slightly halophilic, methanogenic strain GS-16T (T = type strain) represents a new species of bacterium. We propose the name Methanolobus taylorii for this species; strain GS-16 is the type strain....
Dating of shallow groundwater: Comparison of the transient tracers 3H/3He, chlorofluorocarbons, and 85Kr
Brenda Ekwurzel, Peter Schlosser, William M. Smethie Jr., Niel Plummer, Eurybiades Busenberg, Robert L. Michel, Ralf Weppernig, Martin Stute
1994, Water Resources Research (30) 1693-1708
This paper describes a direct comparison of apparent ages derived from 3H/3He, chlorofluorocarbons (CCl3F and CCl2F2), and 85Kr measurements in shallow groundwater. Wells chosen for this study are completed in the unconfined surficial aquifers in late Cenozoic Atlantic Coastal Plain sediments of the Delmarva Peninsula, on the east coast of the United...
Microbial transformation of nitroaromatics in surface soils and aquifer materials
P. M. Bradley, F. H. Chapelle, J. E. Landmeyer, J.G. Schumacher
1994, Applied and Environmental Microbiology (60) 2170-2175
Microorganisms indigenous to surface soils and aquifer materials collected at a munitions-contaminated site transformed 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene (TNT), 2,4-dinitrotoluene (2,4-DNT), and 2,6-dinitrotoluene (2,6-DNT) to amino-nitro intermediates within 20 to 70 days. Carbon mineralization studies with both unlabeled (TNT, 2,4-DNT, and 2,6-DNT) and radiolabeled ([14C]TNT) substrates indicated that a significant fraction of these...
Ammonium sorption to channel and riparian sediments: A transient storage pool for dissolved inorganic nitrogen
Frank J. Triska, Alan P. Jackman, John H. Duff, Ronald J. Avanzino
1994, Biogeochemistry (26) 67-83
Sediment (0.5 mm–2.0 mm grain size) was incubated in nylon bags (200 μm mesh) below the water table in the channel and in two transects of shallow wells perpendicular to the banks (to 18 m) of a third-order stream during August, 1987. One transect of wells drained steep old-growth forest,...
Chemistry of dissolved organic matter in rivers, lakes, and reservoirs
J. A. Leenheer
1994, Book chapter, Environmental chemistry of lakes and reservoirs
Recent investigations provide new insight on the structural chemistry of dissolved organic matter (DOM) in freshwater environments and the role of these structures in contaminant binding. Molecular models of DOM derived from allochthonous and autochthonous sources show that short-chain, branched, and alicyclic structures are terminated by carboxyl or methyl groups...
Surface energy balance estimates at local and regional scales using optical remote sensing from an aircraft platform and atmospheric data collected over semiarid rangelands
William P. Kustas, M. S. Moran, K.S. Humes, D.I. Stannard, P. J. Pinter Jr., L.E. Hipps, E. Swiatek, D.C. Goodrich
1994, Water Resources Research (30) 1241-1259
Remotely sensed data in the visible, near-infrared, and thermal-infrared wave bands were collected from a low-flying aircraft during the Monsoon '90 field experiment. Monsoon '90 was a multidisciplinary experiment conducted in a semiarid watershed. It had as one of its objectives the quantification of hydrometeorological fluxes during the...
The volcanic, sedimentologic, and paleolimnologic history of the Crater Lake caldera floor, Oregon:Evidence for small caldera evolution
C. Hans Nelson, Charles R. Bacon, Stephen W. Robinson, David P. Adam, J. Platt Bradbury, John H. Barber Jr., Deborah Schwartz, Ginger Vagenas
1994, Bulletin (106) 684-704
Apparent phreatic explosion craters, caldera-floor volcanic cones, and geothermal features outline a ring fracture zone along which Mount Mazama collapsed to form the Crater Lake caldera during its climactic eruption about 6,850 yr B.P. Within a few years, subaerial deposits infilled the phreatic craters and then formed a thick...
Interpretation of surface flux measurements in heterogeneous terrain during the Monsoon '90 experiment
D.I. Stannard, J.H. Blanford, William P. Kustas, W. D. Nichols, S.A. Amer, T.J. Schmugge, M.A. Weltz
1994, Water Environment Research (30) 1227-1239
A network of 9-m-tall surface flux measurement stations were deployed at eight sparsely vegetated sites during the Monsoon '90 experiment to measure net radiation, Q, soil heat flux, G, sensible heat flux, H (using eddy correlation), and latent heat flux, λE (using the energy balance equation). At four of these...
Use of ground-based remotely sensed data for surface energy balance evaluation of a semiarid rangeland
M. S. Moran, William P. Kustas, A. Vidal, D.I. Stannard, J.H. Blanford, W. D. Nichols
1994, Water Resources Research (30) 1339-1349
An interdisciplinary field experiment was conducted to study the water and energy balance of a semiarid rangeland watershed in southeast Arizona during the summer of 1990. Two subwatersheds, one grass dominated and the other shrub dominated, were selected for intensive study with ground-based remote sensing systems and hydrometeorological instrumentation. Surface...
Humic and fulvic acids: sink or source in the availability of metals to the marine bivalves Macoma balthicaand Potamocorbula amurensis?
Alan Decho, Samuel N. Luoma
1994, Marine Ecology Progress Series (108) 133-145
Humic acids (HA) and fulvic acids (FA) are common forms of organic matter in marine sedirnents, and are routinely ingested by deposit- and suspension-feeding animals. These compounds may be a sink for metals, implying that once metals are bound to humic substances they are no longer available to food webs....
Sediment balance and flushing flow analysis: Trinity River case study
Robert T. Milhous
1994, Book, Proceedings of the American Geophysical Union Fourteenth Annual Hydrology Days
The use of sediment yield as one aspect of a flushing flow analysis is explored in a case study of the Trinity River in northwestern California. Understanding sediment balance can help in the development of a flushing flow need, but hydraulic analysis must also be done. The most important flushing...
Use of molecular techniques to evaluate the survival of a microorganism injected into an aquifer
S.M. Thiem, M.L. Krumme, R. L. Smith, J.M. Tiedje
1994, Applied and Environmental Microbiology (60) 1059-1067
A PCR primer set and an internal probe that are specific for Pseudomonas sp. strain B13, a 3-chlorobenzoate-metabolizing strain, were developed. Using this primer set and probe, we were able to detect Pseudomonas sp. strain B13 DNA sequences in DNA extracted from aquifer samples 14.5 months after Pseudomonas sp. strain...
Effect of atrazine on potential denitrification in aquifer sediments
P. M. Bradley, F. H. Chapelle, M.L. Jagucki, P.B. McMahon
1994, Soil Biology and Biochemistry (26) 523-524
Agriculturaf use of fertilizers and herbicides has often resulted in nitrate and atrazine contamination of the shallow aquifers that underlay cultivated fields. In several cases, the concentrations of atrazine and nitrate dissolved in ground water are positively correlated (Spalding ef al., 1979; Chen and Druliner, 1987; Spalding et al., 1989)....
Transport of chromium and selenium in the suboxic zone of a shallow aquifer: Influence of redox and adsorption reactions
D.B. Kent, J.A. Davis, L.C.D. Anderson, B.A. Rea, T.D. Waite
1994, Water Resources Research (30) 1099-1114
Breakthrough of Cr(VI) (chromate), Se(VI) (selenate), and O2 (dissolved oxygen) was observed in tracer tests conducted in a shallow, sand and gravel aquifer with mildly reducing conditions. Loss of Cr, probably due to reduction of Cr(VI) to Cr(III) and irreversible sorption of Cr(III), occurred along with slight retardation of Cr(VI), owing...